1 point
*

Weird, I do not know how I missed this publication entirely because I’ve been reading technical reviews for a long time.

Edit: Perhaps it’s because it’s more hardware-based and I am more of a software person.

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10 points

Any reason as to why they closing down???

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11 points
*

Ian Cutress shared on his YouTube channel that the owners saw it as redundant to Toms Hardware even though Anandtech was far more focused on architecture. He went into some detail about how Anandtech was pushed to become more generalist and consumer oriented, so basically it was redundancy that they themselves created

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16 points

It’s implied that it was a decision by management. If I had to guess, it’s related to money and/or the redundancy cause by the same parent company owning both Tom’s Hardware and Anandtech.

Kind of unfortunate, since I always thought Anandtech had the better articles, but I guess this also preserves Anandtech’s legacy in some ways.

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14 points

Anandtech was more nerdy and technical and I presume less people were reading their articles But also the quality of their content was far superior.

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24 points

End of an era.

Thank you for providing a lot of high quality content for so many years!

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217 points

And while the AnandTech staff is riding off into the sunset, I am happy to report that the site itself won’t be going anywhere for a while. Our publisher, Future PLC, will be keeping the AnandTech website and its many articles live indefinitely. So that all of the content we’ve created over the years remains accessible and citable.

This is such a big thing. Losing access to content is something we’re seeing en masse and future historians and hobbyists greatly appreciate having historical articles accessible and not lost to the sands of time. I think it would be even better if we could all torrent and archive as well, but accessibility and continued access is appreciated.

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99 points

Yes but how long until their publisher corporate execs crunch the numbers for the cost of operating the servers and decide it isn’t worth it to keep it going?

It sounds like a large crawl should be initiated at archive.ph and archive.org (Wayback Machine) to keep this info available to the public.

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64 points

Exactly. This is why the internet archive should be a universally publicly-funded endeavor. It’s just as important as the world’s libraries.

I’m really hoping the internet archive shifts to some distributed P2P type model (IPFS, Tahoe-Lafs etc) where anyone can assign a hard drive as tribute, archive any public webpage on it and it’ll be replicated around the world, but still accessible through a single protocol. You can’t stop the signal!

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-5 points

universally publicly-funded endeavor

History has always been in the hands of the victors. We’ve finally created a significant exception. But, status quo society doesn’t want the responsibility of reasoning out their own decisions or understanding those of others. They’ll believe it best to hand their power back to their oppressors. Even if they believe their oppressors “good”, they’re choosing to enslave greatness to democratic mediocrity. Anything but personal sacrifice.

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60 points

Wow, that takes me back. I used to prefer Anandtech to Ars Technica, Hot Hardware, Tom’s Hardware, etc.
But I haven’t visited any of them in like a decade, so I can see why they might be shutting down.

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22 points

Anand la shimpi, the founder, left almost a decade ago, and that seems to have weakened it a good bit, then we got YouTube channels like GN and we just blast them into out feeds quickly because we don’t care about the specific numbers as much as a broad brush.

I remember 20 years ago when performance really, really mattered, but now things are so fast it’s a difference you can’t always easily see unless you’re trying to run over 4k and the game is jokingly badly optimized.

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1 point

Anand left 10 years ago to the day of the announcement. Was pretty well timed and I doubt it was coincidental.

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9 points

I remember 20 years ago when performance really, really mattered, but now things are so fast it’s a difference you can’t always easily see

Yea, I remember back in the day a couple years old system would be obviously out of date and painful (IF you weren’t just using it for simple stuff like office work) to use. The past 15 years or so things have been just so efficient and quick that I’ve been extending my hardware refresh cycles more and more.

I just replaced my old maxed out T440p with its 4th gen i7 last year after going strong since 2015

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9 points

remember 20 years ago when performance really, really mattered

At this point, you could almost just assume next gen CPU is 10% faster than the one that was 10% faster last year.

GPUs are a little more wild, but that’s more a side effect of all 3 having wild swings due to hardware changes and driver updates but it’s still just a single graph you have to update every few months. Not really enough to run a business on.

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9 points

This made me nostalgic, so I just hopped back on techguy.org and logged in again. Member there for 22 years and haven’t logged on in a decade, but they still had my little profile picture of Goku saved. Answered somebody’s hardware question. I still got it! Lol

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8 points

Yeah about the same, I visited /., anadtech, tom’s, betanews, etc about daily maybe 20 years ago, but I haven’t been to those in a decade for sure, except slashdot I still go there

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6 points

Lol, I still check out slashdot too - although it’s usually a day late with news and the comments aren’t anything special. Force of habit I guess.

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4 points

I’m in the same boat, in the early days of Android (Galaxy S 1 days) I used to go to their site just as frequently as Tom’s Hardware, TechPowerUp, etc. because they were on top of most new customizable ROMs if I remember right.

I haven’t had a reason to go back since it has become increasingly more difficult to get a custom ROM on any Galaxy phone, and I almost completely forgot about the site until this announcement.

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